Developmental Coordination Disorder
Developmental coordination disorder: when to refer
Developmental coordination disorder is motor competence substantially below age that interferes with daily life, without another cause. Refer when difficulty is persistent and functional — affecting dressing, handwriting or play — once cerebral palsy, vision problems and intellectual disability are excluded. Occupational therapy is the mainstay.
For the frontline worker: clumsiness that genuinely interferes with daily life is not something a child simply outgrows — and it is easy to under-refer.
In short
Developmental coordination disorder (DCD) is a motor-skill disorder in which movement competence is substantially below age expectation and interferes with daily activities or schoolwork — in the absence of another medical cause. Refer when motor difficulty is persistent, functional, and not explained by cerebral palsy, a visual problem, or intellectual disability. Occupational therapy is the mainstay, and earlier support reduces the secondary toll on confidence and participation.When to refer
1. Marked delay in motor milestones, or persistent clumsiness beyond age expectation. 2. Functional impact — struggles with dressing, buttons, cutlery, stairs, or self-care. 3. School tasks affected — handwriting, scissors, copying from the board, PE. 4. Frequent trips, drops, collisions disproportionate to peers. 5. Avoidance of physical play or fine-motor tasks, with growing frustration. 6. No better explanation — rule out cerebral palsy, significant visual impairment, or global intellectual disability first.If coordination problems are persistent and limiting everyday function, refer rather than reassure.
The Pinnacle way
We assess motor function against everyday participation, not just a checklist. Our occupational therapy teams build task-specific motor programmes, a clinician maps baseline and progress with the AbilityScore®, and we keep referring clinicians in the loop. See developmental coordination disorder. This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 classifies developmental motor coordination disorder (6A04); EACD's international clinical guidance informs DCD identification and management.Next step — refer a child with persistent, functionally limiting coordination difficulty. Refer a child or partner with Pinnacle Blooms Network.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
When should DCD be referred?
When motor difficulty is persistent, below age expectation, and interferes with daily activities or schoolwork — after excluding cerebral palsy, significant visual impairment and intellectual disability.
What treatment helps DCD?
Occupational therapy with task-specific motor practice is the mainstay. Earlier support reduces the secondary impact on confidence, participation and learning.